Somebody Loves Us All_Wilkins
2011 Nominated

Somebody Loves Us All

artwork-image

ABOUT
THE BOOK

Paddy Thompson, speech therapist, newspaper columnist, is fifty and happy. His dark period is behind him: a failed marriage, a career crisis. Now he lives with Helena (‘the best thing that ever happened to him’), helps kids with their speech problems, and has moved his mother into the next-door apartment. His life feels sane and settled.

So what are these new signs of upset? One of his clients refuses to speak. Helena is under stress at work. His newspaper column has run out of puff. Paddy buys a bicycle. He feels, with a typical metaphorical flourish, that ‘one of those great wheels of life had begun a revolution’. Then his mother presents him with the biggest challenge of his life. What follows, in this wonderfully expansive novel, takes Paddy deep into the vortex of family love.

ABOUT
THE AUTHOR Damien
Wilkins

Damien Wilkins has authored fourteen books. His latest, Delirious (2024), won the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction. Aspiring (2020) won the Young Adult Fiction Award, and his debut The Miserables (1993) won the New Zealand Book Award for Fiction. He received a Whiting Writers’ Award from the Whiting Foundation, New York (1992) and an Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi Laureate Award (2013). He’s a creative writing professor at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington and Director of the International Institute of Modern Letters Te Pūtahi Tui Auaha o Te Ao. As a musician and songwriter, he performs as the Close Readers.

Damien Wilkins has authored fourteen books. His latest, Delirious (2024), won the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction. Aspiring (2020) won the Young Adult Fiction Award, and his debut The Miserables (1993) won the New Zealand Book Award for Fiction. He received a Whiting Writers’ Award from the Whiting Foundation, New York (1992) and an Arts Foundation Te Tumu Toi Laureate Award (2013). He’s a creative writing professor at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington and Director of the International Institute of Modern Letters Te Pūtahi Tui Auaha o Te Ao. As a musician and songwriter, he performs as the Close Readers.

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NOMINATING LIBRARY COMMENTS

A clever, witty novel about communication, both oral and physical. What happens when language does not match actions, or when there is no communication at all in families?

Big questions about how we express ourselves in every way are asked and answered.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Country
New Zealand
Original Language
English
Publisher
Victoria University Press

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